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PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE August 7, 2013

Contact: Peter Waldron contactamerica1@msn.com 727-415-7189 (cell)

DOES PAY TO PLAY MEAN THE DEATH KNELL FOR THE IOWA CAUCUSES? CLEARWATER, FLORIDA- - Almost certainly unless Iowans demand radical change, says whistleblower and longtime political consultant, Peter Waldron. He served as Rep. Michele Bachmanns faith based organizer in Iowa 2011. His complaints with the FEC and the Iowa Senate eventually lead to Bachmann refusing to stand for reelection in 2014. The Sorenson scandal affects every republican because Iowa is recognized as first in the nation among GOP voters. Voters in other state primaries and caucuses do not choose presidential candidates in the fullest sense; they choose from among the top tier finishers in Iowa. The scandal is local but its poison affects the national body politic. The Sorenson scandal involved Sen. Kent Sorenson being paid to endorse and work for the Bachmann for President campaign through a third party. Sorenson famously switched sides at the last minute--going to the Ron Paul for President campaign--for what is now alleged to be a $100,000 payment to his political PAC. The Supreme Court of Iowa appointed a special counsel to investigate the matter even before the explosive Ron Paul payment which only this week came to light. Both Republican and Democratic candidates invest millions of dollars in Iowa for the Ames straw poll in August and the state caucuses the following January or February. Hundreds of out-of-state staff members fly into airports, have extended stays in hotels, rent autos, dine in restaurants and travel from Sioux City to Davenport during the heated campaigns to secure a majority in the straw poll. They do this all over again, perhaps with even more vigor, in the caucuses because a win in Iowa attracts money from major donors and galvanizes supporters in other states like South Carolina. How well a candidate can do in this small, unrepresentative state can spell the difference between going forward or dropping out. National media, of course, blanket the state bringing an untold number of dollars to the Iowa economy.

All this is at risk because of the pay for play actions first of the Bachmann for President campaign and then, upping the ante, the Ron Paul for President campaign. Why should the rest of the nation put up with Chicago-style political shenanigans? The short answer is they should not, which is why Iowans must act if they want to retain their first in the nation status. What happens in Iowa between presidential cycles is crucial. Iowa has a sacred duty, first to itself and then the nation, to ensure its process is ethical and not for sale to the highest bidder. Formal complaints filed by Waldron with the Federal Election Commission and Iowa Senate Ethics Committee have prompted several agencies to include the F.B.I. and F.E.C. to launch independent investigations, all of which are ongoing. Observed Waldron: The simple, unavoidable fact is that Rep. Michele Bachmann and then Rep. Ron Paul and their staffs were involved in paying Sen. Sorenson for his endorsement and support. This violates the letter and spirit of Iowa Senate ethics rules which forbid senators from being compensated by presidential campaigns. Unless Iowa shows the nation it has taken decisive action to prevent sales of public office from happening again, said Waldron, the national political parties should let another state caucus or primary become the new first in the nation. --30--

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